Lunch and Learn | Learning Collaborative: Increasing efficiency to improve access to care
This fall, the Alliance will host our third Learning Collaborative: Increasing efficiency to improve access to care.
On September 28, 2023, from 12-1 pm, the Alliance’s Learning Health System team will host a Lunch & Learn to share information about our upcoming learning collaborative, Increasing Efficiency to Improve Access to Care, and to answer questions about the opportunity.
Attending this Lunch 'n' Learn (either live or via recording) is is required to participate in the Learning Collaborative. However, attending the Lunch ‘n’ Learn is not mean you’re committed to joining the Learning Collaborative.
#What we’ll cover in this Lunch ‘n’ Learn
Quality Improvement & Performance Leads Stephanie Bale, Lauren Tessier, and Jennifer Sarkella, and QI Coach Lorri Zagar will be your hosts for this Lunch ‘n’ Learn, where they will:
- Describe in detail what a Learning Collaborative is
- Share what is involved when participating in a Learning Collaborative
- Provide examples of improving efficiency work previously done in CHCs
- Describe the supports you will receive while participating in the Learning Collaborative
- Answer any questions you may have about the learning collaborative
#The Learning Collaborative Area of Focus
While the Quadruple Aim describes what the health care system is trying to achieve on a societal basis, the six dimensions of quality are helpful in defining quality at the centre/practice level. Clients expect to receive care that is effective, efficient, equitable, safe, client-centred, and timely. These six dimensions are intertwined, and focusing improvement on one dimension will often impact another simultaneously. This learning collaborative will support teams looking to increase efficiency at their centre, which can have the added effect of impacting some or all of the other dimensions, particularly timeliness (access to care), effectiveness (better health outcomes) and client-centred care (client experience).
Although improving efficiency is often thought of as reducing resource use (decreasing waste), for the purpose of this learning collaborative, increasing efficiency will focus on maximizing the use of resources. Increasing efficiency in this sense has the potential to build capacity for more client visits or even an increase in your panel size. Better is always possible!
This learning collaborative will marry various Quality Improvement methodologies, including the Model for Improvement and Lean thinking, with the principles of access and efficiency to support teams in their work. Teams who participate in the learning collaborative will choose their own opportunity to increase efficiency. This could include small efforts to reengineer workflows, empower all team members, maximize technology, etc., which could yield the capacity for additional client visits and potential increases in panel size. Examples include but are not limited to:
- Improving efficiency in the intake process.
- Optimizing the care team to ensure all are working to their scope of practice.
- Optimizing rooms, equipment, and staff.
- Improving chronic disease management.
The key role of health equity in addressing the climate crisis and other environmental risks
Climate change is a significant and growing driver of health inequities even here in Canada. However, there are cost-effective ways for primary health care organizations to mitigate the inequitable impacts of climate change on the health of their clients and communities.
#Overview
Our guest presenters are Mariya Bezgrebelna and Sean Kidd, scientists whose research explores the intersections of climate change, health, and equity. In this webinar, they will clearly describe the links between the impacts of climate change and other social and structural determinants of health, demonstrating how climate change intersects with and compounds them. Mariya and Sean will also provide clear, actionable steps and climate-responsive strategies and tactics your organization can adopt with minimal investment of time or energy. This includes:
- Opportunities to collaborate with community partners who may be financially resourced but do not have the same deep knowledge of and connections with your community.
- Case examples from literature of successful climate-related outreach and community engagement initiatives undertaken by other health or social care organizations.
- Ways to advocate for policies and whole-of-community approaches to climate change mitigation.
#Presenters
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Dr. Sean A. Kidd is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto and is the Division Chief of Psychology at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. His work has concentrated upon research with marginalized populations, including trials of community-based interventions for individuals with schizophrenia and youth who have experienced homelessness. |
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Mariya Bezgrebelna is a research analyst at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, working on the Canadian Poverty, Health Equity, and Climate Change initiative. |
Pride in Patient Engagement in Research - Research Day 2023
The inaugural Pride in Patient Research (PiPER) Research Day is taking place on October 5, 2023. This hybrid event is free to register and attend.
PiPER Research Day will be offered virtually and in-person at Hart House at the University of Toronto (St. George Campus). This is a unique free event that provides an opportunity to share, network, and gain practical information related to patient engagement in research.
Please note that in-person registration spaces are limited.
#Topics
PiPER Research Day will feature keynotes, panels, virtual poster sessions, interactive workshops, storysharing sessions, and an art exhibit on the following themes:
- Advancing Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Accessibility, & Allyship
- Deepening Practices, Approaches, and Considerations
- Building Capacity for Partnership
- Measuring Engagement & Impact
The program also includes the launch of PiPER's Patient Engagement in Research Toolkit.
For more information, email PiPER@UHN.ca or call 416-597-3422 ext. 7673
#Keynote Speakers:
- Erin Michalak, Researcher
- Carolyn Ziegler, Peer Researcher
#Who should attend?
- Patients, family members/caregiver partners
- Health care leaders
- Academic and community-based researchers and research staff
- Students and trainees
#Goals & objectives
- Build awareness & foster connections
- Identify approaches, gaps & opportunities
- Apply new skills
- Collaborate to advance a culture of inclusivity and equity
OSSU 2023 Annual Research Day
The day will highlight what is new in data access, hear further conversations around how Ontario continues to navigate within a learning health system and hear a patient experience panel share their thoughts.
This is a hybrid online/in-person event. The in-person component has reached capacity and registration for it has been closed. Registration for the online component is open at the link below.
Citizen-backed evidence – Engaging citizens in providing evidence synthesis and support
Imagine that citizens had the opportunity to work in partnership with the very groups that government policymakers, organizational leaders and professionals rely on for evidence synthesis and support. Join our August 30 webinar as we examine ways of engaging citizens in evidence synthesis and support, with examples drawn from around the globe.
The webinar will also unpack key learnings from the World Health Organization’s guidance paper, “Implementing citizen engagement within evidence-informed policy-making: An overview of purpose and methods,” and a forthcoming guide. Also of note, this webinar takes place as part of the WHO Evidence-to-Policy (E2P) Summit and is available in multiple languages (Arabic, English, French, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish). Interested individuals can take part in only the webinar, or both the webinar and the broader array of sessions that comprise the summit.
This is the second webinar in a four-part series hosted by Cochrane (and the Cochrane Consumer Network), the Global Commission on Evidence to Address Societal Challenges (and its Citizen Leadership Group), and the World Health Organization’s Evidence-informed Policy Network (EVIPNet). This series will zero in on actionable ways to help citizen leaders and those who serve them, e.g., non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and governments
Promoting Vaginal Health to Reduce Risk of HIV in ACB WomXn

#Let's Talk About it: Vaginal Health
This KTE will inform on certain bacteria that may impact vaginal health and report on related cutting edge research. Come and learn how certain bacteria may impact your vaginal health! Don’t miss out on this awesome opportunity to learn about the external influences that impact our bodies and the bodies of those we care about most! Community members & service providers welcome.
For more information contact Natasha@WHIWH.com
#Featured guest speakers:
- Dr. Charu Kaushic, Prof. McMaster University
- Dr. Rupert Kaul, Prof. University of Toronto and Infectious Disease Specialist, University Health Network
- Community Member with experience in BV Studies
#How to participate:
This KTE will be offered in person and online giving 2 ways to get involved.
#In person
20 Grosvenor St. Toronto ON M4Y 2V5
TTC Presto Ticket & Lunch will be provided to our onsite guests
#Online
AGE-WELL Annual Conference - The Future of Healthy Aging
The AGE-WELL Annual Conference is an annual event that brings together stakeholders who set the agenda for the future of technology and aging. Register by September 8 for early-bird prices.
PxP: For patients, by Patients
PxP is a brand new conference about patient engagement, led and designed by patients, specifically for patients. Unlike other patient engagement resources, which are designed primarily for researchers, this one is tailored for patient partners and other individuals with lived experience. Researchers are also welcome to attend!
Check out the online PxP Resource Hub online hub or sign up for the PxP newsletter for more patient-developed resources about patient engagement.
Research Spotlight Webinar: Women’s experiences in injectable opioid agonist treatment programs in Vancouver, Canada
How do social and structural factors impact women’s engagement with Injectable opioid agonist treatment (iOAT)? Guest presenters Samara Mayer and Jules Chapman will draw from a qualitative study of iOAT programs in Vancouver to explore this question. Presented by the National Safer Supply Community of Practice.
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